Conderman v. Rochester Gas & Electric Corp.

180 Misc. 2d 8
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 180 Misc. 2d 8 (Conderman v. Rochester Gas & Electric Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conderman v. Rochester Gas & Electric Corp., 180 Misc. 2d 8 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

William P. Polito, J.

The plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is partially granted. The plaintiffs are entitled to a “res ipsa” position at trial regarding pole No. 103 and the two poles carrying the “live” wires which struck the plaintiffs Napolitano’s vehicle. Defendants are also precluded from introducing evidence to rebut the presumption of negligence, but are not precluded from testing and/or introducing results and/or opinions from tests of the samples of pole No. 103 found after the accident to rebut the presumption of negligence. (Assuming the pieces can be properly identified.)

Defendants are not precluded from proving a superseding, intervening and unforeseeable cause. The determination is based on the following.

FACTS

This cause of action arose during an unusually wintery 50-mile-per-hour wind and ice storm on January 27, 1994. During the storm, 14 electric poles situated on Lyell Road (Route 31) in the County of Monroe and Town of Ogden between Gillette Road and Manitou Road fell, while several remained standing. On that eve at 9:08 p.m. plaintiff Beverly Conderman was traveling westerly to her home from work when one of the 14 poles (No. 103) crashed through her windshield striking her in the face and head causing near fatal injuries. She suffered severe permanent injuries including permanent brain injuries. Plaintiffs Mr. and Mrs. Napolitano were also traveling on Route 31 but in an easterly direction and were injured when “live” wires fell on their vehicle. The fallen poles to which the lines were attached were not identified.

The defendants Rochester Gas & Electric Corporation (R.G.&E.) and Ogden Telephone Company (OTC) owned and had control of the utility poles. The defendant Greater Rochester Cablevision leased use of the utility poles. The defendant [10]*10Osmose Wood Preserving, Inc. (Osmose) contracted with R.G.&E. to inspect, maintain and/or perform necessary testing and work on the wood poles.

The. plaintiffs contend the defendants were negligent in allowing the wood in the poles to become defective, which caused them to fall. Both groups of plaintiffs assert that the defendants destroyed the “crown jewel” of evidence, i.e., the poles, needed to support their cases. Plaintiffs Napolitano on February 14, 1994 filed an order to show cause signed by Judge Wisner ordering that defendants do nothing to destroy the utility poles. On April 20, 1994, Judge Wisner signed a second order to show cause directing that any agents of defendants refrain from destroying and/or damaging the poles in question.

By letter dated May 19, 1994, attorney for defendant R.G.&E. advised that under the direction of defendant R.G.&E. and OTC, the poles had been cut up into four-foot pieces and disposed of within 24 hours of the accident. On the evening of the accident due to the necessity of clearing the road and restoring power, the poles in the road were cut into four-foot pieces, and stacked along the side of the road. The remaining portions of any poles still standing were also cut to ground level and stacked. Thereafter, the wood was loaded by R.G.&E. crews onto its trucks and delivered to its nearby western Monroe County site where it was discarded in a dumpster. The said defendant then hired an independent contractor to haul the wood to Seneca Meadows Land Fill in Seneca County for destruction.

On the evening of the accident an R.G.&E. risk management team (Mr. Thomas Powell and Ms. Elizabeth Casey) were called and arrived at the scene within 1.5 hours of the accident. The written rules of R.G.&E. required that specific claims personnel be called when a nonemployee was injured. Mr. Powell, the head of the Claims Department, is one of three persons explicitly listed from the Claims Department to be called. Mr. Powell was also the manager of the risk management team which is under the auspices of the Claims Department. The report sheet for that evening shows a call-in of a “fatality” to which Mr. Powell and Ms. Casey were then notified and responded. The next item on the report is a call indicating “12 poles down, due to MVA isolated area & reenergized” (exhibit T). These experienced claims personnel proceeded to the scene where they took pictures of the injured plaintiff Conderman’s vehicle including the license plate, blood-stained interior, and the pole which was still on and inside the vehicle. However, [11]*11they made no effort to mark, identify, preserve, or test the poles involved in the injuries. Plaintiffs contend that such immediate investigation and selective preservation of evidence by experienced claims personnel called to specifically investigate the fatality showed a high degree of awareness by defendants of a possible lawsuit. Plaintiffs further assert that even if the poles were cut up, the immediate untested destruction was not necessary. They claim it would not have been a large inconvenience for the defendant to simply have kept at least those poles which caused the injuries at its delivery site location in western Monroe County until testing had been performed.

Although the poles were destroyed, plaintiffs did obtain some small fragments from the scene. These fragments were discovered by plaintiffs’ investigators shortly after the accident. The investigators marked these fragments according to the number of the pole closest to where the fragment was found, including several as No. 103. Plaintiffs assert that those fragments marked No. 103 by their investigators were not from pole No. 103. Plaintiffs have submitted an affidavit of George Kyanka, Ph D expert, who states that there remain only nine very small fragments which, except for pole No. 99A, were less than a few feet in length and less than a few inches thick. Kyanka further states that he visited the site in May of 1994 and none of the pole stumps remained. Kyanka states that he took a core sample of two poles, which did not fall, and a core sample from pole No. 99A, which did fall. He asserts however, that these samples are essentially irrelevant because they are not of the pole which fell on the plaintiff’s vehicle. More importantly, he asserts that because wood has inherently different variable characteristics in material the poles do not uniformly decay or otherwise degrade as between each other, or even at different places in the same pole. Therefore, he states he is unable to make any objective, definite conclusions as to the physical integrity of any of the poles on the date of the accident.

APPLICABLE LAW

At least two years prior to the subject January 1994 accident, the law in New York had established a high “Spoliator Beware” standard wherein even the negligent, nonwilful, destruction of crucial and dispositive evidence in the sole possession of one of the parties could bring severe sanctions of dismissal or summary judgment against the destroying party. Such destruction is “a major departure from professional and reasonable standards of care within the litigation industry”. (Hoenig, Spolia[12]*12tion Update; 'Reasonable’ Expert Fee, NYLJ, Apr. 13, 1992, at 3, col 1.) Personal injury specialists, defense as well as plaintiff, almost uniformly recognize the elevated priority of preserving the evidence, so that drastic sanctions are not necessarily unduly harsh sanctions when a critical item of evidence is not preserved. (Hoenig, Spoliation of the ‘Crown Jewels’: An Update, NYLJ, Mar. 11, 1991, at 3, col 1; Hoenig, Spoliation Update; ‘Reasonable’ Expert Fee, NYLJ, Apr.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Misc. 2d 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conderman-v-rochester-gas-electric-corp-nysupct-1998.